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Science/Tech

Netcare Pilots Wearable Tech & AI In Wards,

25 May at 09:04 AM, via Tech Financials

Netcare has announced that it is piloting clinical-grade wearable monitoring technology in general wards at a flagship facility, as part of a broader strategy to integrate artificial intelligence (AI) tools across its ecosystem. The move positions the private hospital group as a continental leader in digitally enabled, data-driven healthcare. The announcement came as Netcare today […]

How iGaming Operators Can Launch Their Own Prediction Market

25 May at 08:24 AM, via Tech Financials

Prediction markets are not a sportsbook with different branding. The contract structure is different, the margin economics are different, and regulators treat them as a separate product category. For iGaming operators who already run payment infrastructure, hold gambling licenses, and maintain active player pools, that difference is an opportunity. This guide covers what you need […]

Starwatch: this week’s rare blue moon highlights the strange way we mark our calendar

25 May at 07:00 AM, via The Guardian

Because we define dates based on the stars, the full moon on 31 May will be the second one of the calendar month

This week’s full moon is a blue moon. The term does not describe the colour of the moon, but instead arises from the way we define our calendar in reference to the stars rather than the moon.

The moon takes almost a month to circle our planet. The exact time is 29.5 days but if we...

Lion’s aid: blood ice lollies keep big cats cool at London zoo

24 May at 18:21 PM, via The Guardian

Animals have tactics of their own to cope with the heat, but zoo animals also get a little help from their keepers

A hot bank holiday weekend might see humans flock to the beach, don summer hats and crack open a cold beer, but when it comes to keeping big cats cool, zoos turn to a rather different treat: blood lollies.

While experts note habitats within zoos are carefully tuned to their...

China launches three-crew space flight as part of lunar ambitions

24 May at 17:10 PM, via The Guardian

Mission will put first astronaut in orbit for a year, a key step in Beijing’s plan to put people on the moon by 2030

China has launched its Shenzhou-23 mission in which an astronaut will spend a full year in orbit for the first time, a crucial step in Beijing’s ambition to send humans to the moon by 2030.

The Long March 2-F rocket lifted off from the Jiuquan launch centre in north-western China...

‘Pompeii, but in the middle of a massive city’: the ice age fossil site hidden in Los Angeles

24 May at 17:00 PM, via The Guardian

La Brea Tar Pits – the only urban, active ice age excavation site in world – gets a mammoth face lift for the first time in nearly 50 years

Los Angeles is known for famous museum such as the Getty and the Lacma, but perhaps fewer people are aware that – in the heart of the city – lies a museum that contains one of the world’s most remarkable fossil sites.

The La Brea Tar Pits and Museum is home...

Could nature itself hold the solution to climate change?

24 May at 13:00 PM, via The Guardian

Technological interventions face huge financial or practical challenges, but there is another way

In 2019, my scientific research was nearly brought to an early end when my team and I published the bombastic statement that natural forest restoration was the “best climate change solution” available in a paper for the peer-reviewed journal Science.

I remember a colleague from the World Wildlife...

The hill I will die on: If Hollywood blockbusters must dabble in science, can’t they get the small stuff right? | Helen Pilcher

24 May at 12:30 PM, via The Guardian

Project Hail Mary, Jurassic Park: from dino-mosquitoes to a spaceship’s roar, pointless mistakes on the scientific details make me wince

On the advice of my teenage son, I recently went to the cinema to see Project Hail Mary. The film has science in it. I am a science writer and so he was convinced I would like it.

Imagine my surprise partway through, however, when I found myself seething so...

UK Institute Is Hunting for Dangers Lurking in AI

24 May at 11:01 AM, via New York Times

The government’s A.I. Security Institute, staffed by alumni from OpenAI and Google, is becoming a model for countries grappling with A.I.’s emerging risks.

SpaceX rocket bursts into flames during Indian Ocean landing – video

23 May at 12:20 PM, via The Guardian

SpaceX launched its biggest, most powerful Starship yet on a test flight on Friday. It was an upgraded version of the spacecraft Nasa is counting on to land astronauts on the moon. It blasted off from the southern tip of Texas, carrying 20 mock Starlink satellites that were released midway through the hour-long flight that stretched halfway around the world. Despite some engine trouble, the...

Stephen Hawking’s father worried his son ‘does not study much’, diaries reveal

23 May at 07:00 AM, via The Guardian

Exclusive: New biography uncovers Frank Hawking’s papers in which he lamented that his son had ‘little initiative’

In exploring the physics and geometry of the universe, Stephen Hawking became a world-renowned pioneer of black hole theory, writing the bestselling book A Brief History of Time, which has sold more than 13m copies, and inspiring people to “look up at the stars and not down at...

Stateside with Kai and Carter: why the fight over abortion pills is only just beginning – podcast

23 May at 06:00 AM, via The Guardian

The US supreme court has preserved nationwide access to mail-order abortion pills – for now. As Carter Sherman explains, the fight to protect this medication is far from over, as a nationwide, near-total abortion ban could be on the horizon. Carter speaks with Dr Angel Foster, co-founder of the Massachusetts Medication Abortion Access Project, who reveals how the legal battle over abortion...

SpaceX launches its biggest rocket yet in test flight from Texas

23 May at 00:52 AM, via The Guardian

The launch is the 12th test flight of the mega-rocket that CEO Elon Musk is building to get people to Mars one day

SpaceX launched its biggest, most powerful Starship yet on a test flight Friday, an upgraded version that Nasa is counting on to land astronauts on the moon.

The redesigned mega-rocket made its debut two days after SpaceX CEO Elon Musk announced he’s taking the company public. It...

defi.com CEO Neil May Challenges Industry: “Most DeFi Projects Are Building Privacy for Anonymity, Not Privacy for People”

22 May at 19:38 PM, via Tech Financials

London, England  – As the DeFi sector rushes to integrate zero-knowledge proofs and privacy pools, defi.com CEO Neil May has issued a sharp rebuke to the industry: the vast majority of privacy solutions are solving the wrong problem. “Privacy without identity is just hiding,” said May. “The industry has become obsessed with making transactions invisible, […]

Health blame game doesn’t hold water | Brief letters

22 May at 18:55 PM, via The Guardian

Sink or swim? | Deep vision | Sacrificial candidate | Diverting days out

Sir Christopher Ball telling people their future longevity is in their own hands and to stop blaming others (Report, 20 May) is akin to telling a drowning man to pull himself together and swim, without asking what were the circumstances that put him in the water in the first place. Life and longevity is a complex issue and...

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